Scores of protesters gathered in Grand Central to mark the two-year anniversary of a weekly Black Lives Matter protest that started partly in response to the chokehold death of Staten Island resident Eric Garner.

Activist Mike Bento, one of the founding members of NYC Shut-It-Down, which runs the protests, said the group plans to keep the weekly rallies going.

"We've built a consciousness to respond to police and make the point that black lives matter and police need to be held accountable. If you don't do these things, these are people that are going to be coming after you," he said.

The group has run afoul of the NYPD in the past, and Bento says he's been arrested at least a dozen times. No one was arrested Monday night.

Close to 100 protesters marched from Grand Central to Times Square for on Monday, as about a dozen members of the NYPD's Strategic Response Group followed.

The protest, which started inside the terminal, ended in Times Square. (Gregg Vigliotti/For New York Daily News)

The weekly protests started in February 2015, roughly two months after a Staten Island grand jury declined to indict NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo, the cop who put Garner, 43, in a chokehold on July 17, 2014. Garner died after saying he couldn't breathe.

Bento and fellow Shut-It-Down member Kimberly Ortiz read from a long list of names of people of color who were killed by police or died in police custody.

"There's a lot of families who are grateful to us for keeping the names of their loved ones alive and showing they do matter," Ortiz said. "We're going to continue doing this until we don't have to anymore."

Hannah Snelling, 24, a London tourist, said she joined the demonstration as the group walked by the Disney Store in Times Square.

"I just find it so upsetting," she said. "I just think it's so horrible that people have lost people. I don't feel like anyone should have to go through this."